Heidritter v. Elizabeth Oil-Cloth Co.

112 U.S. 294, 5 S. Ct. 135, 28 L. Ed. 729, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1883
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 24, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by142 cases

This text of 112 U.S. 294 (Heidritter v. Elizabeth Oil-Cloth Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heidritter v. Elizabeth Oil-Cloth Co., 112 U.S. 294, 5 S. Ct. 135, 28 L. Ed. 729, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1883 (1884).

Opinion

*300 Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court. He stated the facts in the foregoing language, and continued :

The information alleged violations of numerous sections of the internal revenue laws, ivhich it is not necessary to mention further than to say, that on its face it disclosed a case for a forfeiture under those laws of the property described in it, clearly within the jurisdiction of the court.

The precise question thus arising, is, whether the-plaintiff in error acquired the legal title to the premises in controversy, by virtue of the deed from the sheriff of Union County, and the judgments and proceedings on which it was based.

These proceedings, so far as against the owner of the property they undertook to enforce the plaintiff’s claim as a lien upon his interest in it, were in the nature of proceedings in rem,, though not so, perhaps, in technical strictness, for they did not profess to conclude all the world. Such, particularly, was their nature in the cases under consideration, where the owner and builder were one person, and he was served with process only constructively, not actually, being presumably without the jurisdiction of the court. It was declared so to be in Gordon v. Torrey, 2 McCarter (15 N. J. Eq.) 112.

“The proceeding in such cases,” said Mr. Justice Field, delivering the opinion of the court in Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S. 714, 730, “ though in the form of a personal action, has been uniformly treated, where service was not obtained and the party did not voluntarily appear, as effectual and binding merely as a proceeding in rem, and as having no operation beyond the disposition of the property, or some interest therein. And the reason assigned for this conclusion has been that which we have already stated, that the tribunals of one State have no jurisdiction over persons beyond its limits, and can inquire only into their obligations to its citizens when exercising its conceded jurisdiction over their property within its limits.”

That jurisdiction is called into exercise judicially and attaches, as elsewhere stated in the same opinion (p. 727), “ where property is once brought under the control of the court by seizure or: some equivalent act. The law assumes that property *301 is always in the possession of its owner in person or by agent; and it proceeds upon the theory that its seizure will inform him not only that it is taken into the custody of the court, but that he must look to any proceedings authorized by law upon such seizure for its condemnation and sale. Such service may also be sufficient in cases where the object of the action is to reach and dispose of property in the State, or of some interest therein, by enforcing a contract or lien respecting the same, or to partition it among different owners, or, whtere. the public is a party, to condemn and appropriate it for a public purpose. In other words, such service may answer in all actions which are substantially proceedings in rem.”

In Cooper v. Reynolds, 10 Wall. 308, 318, it is said by Mr. Justice Miller, delivering the opinion of the court, that, in such cases, where there is no appearance of the defendant and no service of process on him, “ the case becomes, in its essential nature, a proceeding in rem,” and that (p. 317), “while the general rule in regard to jurisdiction in rem requires an actüal seizure and possession of the res by the officer of the court, such jurisdiction may be acquired by acts which are of equivalent .import and which stand for and represent the dominion of the court over the thing and in effect subject it to the control of the court.”

This may be by the levy of a-writ, or the mere bringing of a suit. “It is immaterial,” said this court by Mr. Justice McLean, in Boswell’s Lessee v. Otis, 9 How. 336, “whether the proceeding against the property be by an '.attachment or • bill in chancery. It must be substantially a proceeding in rem.”

Indeed, so far as the proceedings in question sought to bind the land by enforcing the plaintiff’s claim as a specific lien thereon, and to dispose of the premises in satisfaction thereof by a sale, they were substantially in rem, whether there was personal or merely constructive service of process upon the defendant owner. The kind of process and mode of sérvice could be material only with reference to the nature of the judgment. He could be bound personally only by his coming or being brought personally within the jurisdiction of the court. But the land might be bound," without actual service of process *302 upon the owner, in cases where the only pbject of the'proceeding was to enforce a claim against it specifically, of a nature to bind the title. In such cases the land itself must be drawn within the .jurisdiction of the court .by some assertion of its control and power over it. This, as we have seen, is ordinarily done by actual seizure, but may be done by the mere bringing of the suit in which the claim is sought to be enforced, which may by law, be equivalent to a seizure, being the open and publip exercise of dominion over it for the purposes of the suit.

When, however, the proceedings were begun for the enforcemeht of the’ mechanics’ liens against the premises in controversy, by the issuing of the summons and the filing of the declaration, the property over which the State court sought to exert its jurisdiction was in the actual custody'and possession of the District Court of the United States for 'the District of New Jersey. It had been seized by an officer of the United States for an alleged offence against its laws. It was pro- ' ceeded against as forfeited to the United States, and to declare and enforce that forfeiture judicially, it had been taken possession of by the court. This proceeding was undoubtedly in rerrn, and it is quite immaterial whether the law authorized an absolute forfeiture of the res, including all interests and estates in it, so' as to overreach antecedent liens and adverse claims, or only of the actual interest of the owner charged with the violations • of law at the time of the alleged offences. In either view, and for either purpose, the court had taken possession of the property itself, and that possession was necessarily exclusive. The res was thereby drawn into the exclusive jurisdiction and dominion of the United States; and, for the purposes of that suit, it was, at the same time, withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the courts of New Jersey. Any proceeding against it, involving the control and disposition of it, in the latter, while in that condition, was as if it were a proceeding against property in another State. It was vain, nugatory, and void, and as against the proceedings and judgment of the District Court of the United States, and those claiming under, them, was without effect.

In this aspect, the case is directly within the rule of decision *303 established in Wiswall v. Sampson, 14 How.

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Bluebook (online)
112 U.S. 294, 5 S. Ct. 135, 28 L. Ed. 729, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heidritter-v-elizabeth-oil-cloth-co-scotus-1884.